Genealogy Projects tagged with poland on the Geni Family Tree

In the mid-1800s Kashubians migrated for economic reasons. After the Franco-Prussian War and the unification of Germany under Bismarck, Kashubians were met with institutionalized hostility. Life was very harsh for the Kashubs. It was illegal to use Polish or Kashubian in public, especially in church. Many priests were imprisoned or exiled. Churches were left with no parish priests. As a result,...

The Łódź Ghetto (German: Ghetto Litzmannstadt ) was the second-largest ghetto (after the Warsaw Ghetto) established for Jews and Roma in German-occupied Poland.
Situated in the town of Łódź and originally intended as a temporary gathering point for Jews, the ghetto was transformed into a major industrial centre, providing much needed supplies for Nazi Germany and especially for the German Arm...

The Lublin Ghetto was a World War II ghetto created by Nazi Germany in the city of Lublin in occupied Poland, on the Nazi-administered territory of the General Government. Its inhabitants were mostly Polish Jews, although a number of Roma were also present.
The Lublin Ghetto, set up in March 1941, was one of the first Nazi-era ghettos in occupied Poland to be "liquidated". In November 1942 ar...

This project aims to assemble all of the Jewish families from the city of Łódź.
We welcome collaborators. There are a lot of families to find and enter. Feel free to join the project and enter the names of families who lived in Łódź. Go to ACTIONS (top right of the profile) click on ADD TO PROJECT. Select the project name that appears from the responsive check box and then DONE.
The history...

The Izbica Ghetto was a Jewish ghetto created in Izbica in occupied Poland during World War II, serving as a transfer point for deportation of Jews from Poland, Germany, Austria and Czechoslovakia to Belzec and Sobibor extermination camp s.
Jews in Izbica (eez-beetz-uh) established a kehilla in 1775. Under threat of imprisonment, Jews were forbidden to cross the bridge leading from Izbica to ...

The Częstochowa Ghetto was a Jewish ghetto set up by Nazi Germany in the city of Częstochowa in south-central Poland, for the purpose of persecution and exploitation of local Jews during the German occupation of Poland.
The approximate number of people confined to the ghetto at its beginning was around 40,000 and at its peak – right before mass deportations – 48,000.
In late 1942 most ghett...

The Holocaust in Nazi-occupied Poland took the lives of three million Polish Jews, destroying an entire civilization. Poles represented the largest number of people who rescued Jews during the Holocaust. To date, 6,863 Poles have been awarded the title of Righteous Among the Nations by the State of Israel, over 700 of which received their awards posthumously.
Between October 1939 and July 194...

The Warsaw Ghetto was the largest ghetto in all of Nazi occupied Europe, with over 400,000 Jews crammed into an area of 1.3 square miles (3.4 km2), or 7.2 persons per room.From there, about 254,000 Ghetto residents were sent to Treblinka extermination camp during the two months of summer 1942.
The sheer death-toll among the Jewish inhabitants of the Ghetto during the Großaktion Warschau would...

The Order Wojenny Virtuti Militari (War Order of Virtuti Militari) (Latin for "For Military Valour") is Poland's highest military decoration for heroism and courage in the face of the enemy at war. It was created in 1792 by Poland's King Stanisław August Poniatowski and is one of the oldest military decorations in the world still in use.
Order Virtuti Militari (łac. Męstwu wojskowemu – (cnoci...

Krakow was one of the largest Jewish centers in Poland/Galicia.
Founded before the end of the first millennium, the city of Krakow (Cracow), located today in southern Poland, served as the seat of the Piast Dynasty and eventually as the capital of the Polish Kingdom until the early 17th century. After the third partition of Poland in 1795, Krakow became the seat of Galicia province in the Aus...

The Rejowiec Transit Ghetto Transit stop for the murder of Slovak Jews Map of Rejowiec in the Krasnystaw districtRejowiec in the district of Chelm, acquired municipal rights during the 16th Century and became famous thanks to Mikolaj Rej, a distinguished poet of the Polish Renaissance. At the end of the 16th Century Rejowiec was populated mostly by Jews, and by the 20th Century the Jews account...

KATYN 1940
Please add profiles of Polish officers who were murdered in Katyn area (including i.e. Kharkiv, Mednoye, Ostashkiv) in the spring of 1940.
The Katyn massacre, also known as the Katyn Forest massacre, was a mass execution of Polish nationals carried out by the People's Commissariat for Internal Affairs (NKVD), the Soviet secret police, in April and May 1940. The massacre was pro...

Jewish Community of Brody
In celebration of the town of Brody , Austria, present day Ukraine, and the people who came from there, particularly those who died in the Holocaust. A city, where wisdom and wealth, Torah and understanding, commerce and faith are united - Nachman Krochmal , in a letter to Isaac Erter 1961
Please add your ancestors or heroes from Brody to the project. You can do so...

The Order of Saint Stanislaus (Polish: Order św. Stanisława Biskupa Męczennika, Russian: Орден Святого Станислава), also spelled Stanislas, was a Polish order of knighthood founded in 1765 by King Stanisław August Poniatowski of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. It remained under the Kingdom of Poland between 1765 and 1831, and was incorporated under the Russian Empire from 1831 to 1917, unti...

On the outbreak of World War II, there were about 14,000 Jews in Rzeszow. The German army entered the city on Sept. 10, 1939, and the anti-Jewish reign of terror began. In December 1941 a closed ghetto was established in Rzeszow. On July 7–13, 1942, the first mass deportation took place: about 14,000 Jews from the entire district of Rzeszow were concentrated in the ghetto and immediately deport...

The Order of the White Eagle (Polish: Order Orła Białego) is Poland's highest decoration awarded to both civilians and the military for their merits. It was officially instituted on November 1, 1705 by Augustus II the Strong and bestowed on eight of his supporters: four Polish magnates, three Russian field marshals (including Peter Lacy), and one Cossack hetman.
Order Orła Białego – najstarsz...

1863 January Uprising - Lithuanian and Polish revolt against Imperial Russia.
Started in 1862-1864.
Please add profiles of participants in January Uprising, including people who participated in preparation of this event.
If in your family tree you have a persons that were participants in Lithuanian-Polish uprising against Tsarists Russia, please add them to this project. It would be gre...

This project seeks to trace and connect people with the surname Philippsborn and variants Philipsborn and Phillipsborn, associated with the South Prussian town of Bentschen, Posen, modern-day Zbąszyń, in Nowy Tomyśl powiat or county. It is located close to the border of today's Germany. Earlier associated with the Kingdom of Prussia, the town became part of the Grand Duchy of Posen after the Na...

The purpose of Porębski family project is to gather in one place all the information about this family. Feel free to work with all your familiar to me, and no known family. I will also gladly welcomed all people willing to work together and with information useful for research. I also invite all people interested in this project. Kindly share comments in the guest book.
Among Porębski and his...

This project seeks to collect all of the Jewish families from the town of Bircza, Poland, also known as Berch, Bircha, Birtch.
Bircza Online! Virtual Shtetl
Gesher Galicia - Bircza
JewishGen - Bircza
Background
Bircza [ˈbirt͡ʂa] (Ukrainian: Бірча) is a village in Przemyśl County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship, in south-eastern Poland. It is the seat of the gmina (administrative district) ...

On February 15, 1941, and February 26, 1941, two deportation transports with 2,003 Jewish men, women and children on board left Vienna Aspang Station bound for Opole, a small town south of Lublin. Opole had a long established Jewish community; when war broke out about 4,000 Jews lived here, i.e. about 70 percent of the population, a proportion which rose further after the beginning of the war...

Heads of Jewish Households listed in History of the Jewish Community of Ostrowo , written in 1896 by Aaron Friemann. The list is of households with membership in the Ostrowo Synagogue.
Reproduced here in English translation.
The current city of Ostrów Wielkopolski, Poland, is here:
The synagogue building still stands today, and has been renovated and is used as a community center/performa...

The Kindertransport (also Refugee Children Movement or "RCM'") is the name given to the rescue mission that took place during the nine months prior to the outbreak of the Second World War. The United Kingdom took in nearly 10,000 predominantly Jewish children from Nazi Germany, Austria, Czechoslovakia, Poland, and the Free City of Danzig. The children were placed in British foster homes, hostel...

Polish prisoners of war/Polscy Jency Wojenni
In September 1939, Poland was invaded by German and Soviet troops.
A large proportion of the Polish army was captured: around 400,000 men by the German forces and over 200,000 by Soviet troops. Until February 1940, the German authorities gave the ICRC lists of the Polish prisoners of war they held, but after that date they stopped. In 1943, they ...

❢IMPORTANT❢
Do not start adding random people to this project. It helps nobody and will quickly turn it into some sort of flame-war regarding who belongs and who doesn't. Please read the goal of the project below. After you understand what the project is about and you want to add relevant people, please make sure that you inform Volodya Mozhenkov , so that profiles are not duplicated.
About...

This project is here to give us a greater insight into the lives of our ancestors from across the empire and to help us work together to find our common roots.
List of Austro-Hungarian Jews Wikipedia
Famous People
Sigmund Freud : Father of Psychoanalysis.
Theodor Herzl : Father of Zionism.
Stefan Zweig : Novelist, playwright, journalist, biographer.
Franz Kafka : Novelist.

If in your family tree you have a persons that were participants of the Great Sejm, please add them to this project. It would be great if within profile description there would be brief biography. Do not add relatives, only add electoral members of the Great Sejm.
Within opened profile page use the 'Actions' button to "Add to project". Select this project (you must be on the list of collabo...

This project seeks to collect all of the Jewish families from the town of Ostrowiec, Radom Region, Poland.
About Ostrowiec
Ostrowiec Świętokrzyski [ɔsˈtrɔvʲɛt͡s ɕfʲɛntɔˈkʂɨskʲi] (About this sound listen) is a town in south-central Poland (historic province of Lesser Poland) with 74,211 inhabitants (2006). The main industry is metallurgy. Ostrowiec is the capital city of Ostrowiec Świętokrzy...

This project seeks to include descendants from all those Jewish families who once lived in Vilkaviskis. The town is now in Lithuania, but in the interwar years was in Poland. If your family's roots are here, please add their profiles.
There is an excellent article by Joseph Rosin on the history of the town on the JewishGen KehilaLink here: .
In addition, note the wonderful resource of Jewis...

Bochnia is located in southern Poland, in the Malopolskie Province (Lesser Poland). Since the first partition of Poland, Bochnia was under the rule of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.
According to the administrative division from 1918-1939, Bochnia was the seat of the Bochnia County which was part of Kraków Province.
History
Bochnia is one of the oldest towns in Poland and was first mentioned...

This project seeks to identify Jewish individuals from or connected to the region of Kujawy in Pomerania, Poland. Many small towns and villages have no specific Jewish Town Projects. Some of the larger towns have projects, for example Konin and Kutno. Other Town Projects may be developed in due course.
Places like Aleksandrow Kujawski, Babiak, Brzesc Kujawski, Chodecz, Dabie nad Nerem, Dobrzy...

The November Uprising (1830–31), also known as the Polish–Russian War 1830–31 or the Cadet Revolution, was an armed rebellion in the heartland of partitioned Poland against the Russian Empire. The uprising began on 29 November 1830 in Warsaw when the young Polish officers from the local Army of the Congress Poland's military academy revolted, led by lieutenant Piotr Wysocki. They were soon join...

The Lviv Ghetto or the Lwów Ghetto (also known as Lvov or Lemberg Ghetto , Polish: getto lwowskie) was a World War II ghetto set up in the city of Lwów (now Lviv, Ukraine) on the territory of Nazi-administered General Government in German-occupied Poland.
It was one of the largest Jewish ghettos established by Nazi Germany after the joint Nazi-Soviet invasion of Poland.
The city was a home ...

This is an umbrella project for the Jewish communities historically associated with Poland- this includes the Russian Pale, Congress Poland, Galicia and parts of Prussia.
NOTE THE LIST BELOW IS NOT ALL INCLUSIVE AND IS IN PROGRESS OF DEVELOPMENT. There were over 1000 Jewish communities in Poland and what was at one point or another historically associated with Poland.
Please feel free to ad...

The Bialystok Ghetto was set up by Nazi Germany between July 26 and early August 1941 in the new capital of Bezirk Bialystok district of German-occupied Poland.
About 50,000 Jews from the vicinity of Białystok and the surrounding region were herded into a small area of the city.
The ghetto was split in two by the Biala River running through it (see map). Most inmates were put to work in the...

Split's Immigrants from other Countries by the Beginning of 19th Century and Their Surnames
At the beginning of the 19th century, Split has seen a rapid increase in population by influx of people migrating from all over Dalmatia, the Apennine peninsula, the Austro-Hungarian Empire and some Mediterranean and European countries. They were doctors, administrative staff, music teachers, craftsmen...

This project is dedicated to commemorating the once vibrant and influential Jewish community of Kozienice "Koznitz" in Poland. The goal of this project is to identify and catalogue all of the Jewish families that lived in Kozienice prior to the destruction of the Jewish community during World War II.
From Wikipedia:
Kozienice [kɔʑɛˈɲit͡sɛ] (Yiddish: קאזשניץ Kozhnits) is a town in central Po...

Main information and table of contents taken from the book: Hitler's Foreign Divisions: Foreign Volunteers in the Waffen-SS 1940-1945, by Chris Bishop, Amber Books Ltd., London, United Kingdom, c. 2005. Book
Introduction. "Even today, more than six decades after the outbreak of World War II, it still seems incredible that thousands of men whose countries had been conquered by the Nazis should...

This project brings together all the Wapinski families of Poland and their relations. We seek to use traditional paper records and genetic genealogy to explore and identify possible connections between all the families surnamed Wapinski (and related spellings) in this region.
Most of the Wapinski families identified so far were originally living within or in the area of the city of Lomza . Sp...

Kraków Ghetto was one of five major, metropolitan Jewish ghettos created by Nazi Germany in the General Government territory for the purpose of persecution, terror, and exploitation of Polish Jews during the German occupation of Poland in World War II.
It was a staging point to begin dividing "able workers" from those who would later be deemed unworthy of life.
The Ghetto was liquidated bet...

Wikipedia
JewishGen
Oshpitzin
History of Oswiecim
Profile photo attributed to Ed Wight, MailOnline, Jan 27, 2015 Photo of Auschwitz assembly square - Jack Hazut, Jewish Virtual Library
Background
The town's name is of Slavic extraction, likely deriving from the name of the owner of a Slavic gord which existed there in the Middle Ages. Across centuries, it was spelled in many diffe...

1918 Influenza Pandemic - Poland: Survivors
"Please add to this project any profiles of those who suffered but survived the' Spanish Flu' pandemic of 1918
To participate in any project
- you do need to first be a collaborator - so please join the project using the request link under "actions" at the top right of the page. Visit Geni Wikitext, Unicode and images which gives a great deal of...

1918 Influenza Pandemic - Poland: Fatalities
"Please add to this project any profiles of those who perished in the' Spanish Flu' pandemic of 1918
To participate in any project
- you do need to first be a collaborator - so please join the project using the request link under "actions" at the top right of the page. Visit Geni Wikitext, Unicode and images which gives a great deal of assistan...

I would like to learn more about the Trybus family tree in my genealogy and help many others out in their researching. Anyone can feel free to post questions, start discussions, join this page, and help people out with their family tree. My main goal with this page is to help everyone with their trees (specifically people who have Trybus ancestry) and to get information from what other people k...

Background
The area of Nowy Wiśnicz was a monastic village that had existed since the 8th century. The first Jews settled down in this village in 1606. After being banished from Bochnia, they were offered assistance by the village owners called Lubomirscy. In 1613, Nowy Wiśnicz became the property of Stanisław Lubomirski, who was the governor of the Cracow Province. In 1616, he established th...

The Jews of Tarnów and the Ghetto
Jews of Tarnow YIVO
Yizkor Tarnow JewishGen
Tarnow's Jewish Cemetery
Before World War II, about 25,000 Jews lived in Tarnów. Jews, whose recorded presence in the town went back to the mid-15th century, comprised about half of the town's total population.[citation needed] A large portion of Jewish business in Tarnów was devoted to garment and hat man...

This project focuses on Jews from the town of Szczuczyn, located in what is now the Podlaskie Voivodeship of northeast Poland. Before WW2, Szczuczyn was in the Białystok province, and before WW1 in the Łomża gubernia (Lomza province) of the Russian Empire. Many immigration records of Jews who emigrated from Szczuczyn before WW1 will show their origin as either Russia or Poland.
This project d...

This project seeks to collect all of the Jewish families from the town of Baranów Sandomierski, Poland.
KehilaLinks
Gesher Galicia
JewishGen Yizkor Book
Virtual Shtetl
History
Baranów Sandomierski [baˈranuf sandɔˈmʲɛrskʲi] is a small town in southern Poland, in the Subcarpathian Voivodship, Tarnobrzeg County on the Vistula River, with 1,440 inhabitants (02.06.2009). It belongs to th...

Kashubian History and Culture
This project is to focus on the history of the Kashubian people and their unique culture, traditions and language. Kashubians are not German nor Polish. Since 2005, the Kashubian language enjoys legal protection by the Polish government as a minority language. Kashubian is taught in Polish schools and is found on many street signs in the region.
Historians and ...

Seeking any information on possible 19th and 20th Century migrants with one of the last names listed in the project name who may be Jewish or have Jewish roots, and who may have migrated from Poland or Galicia - Warsaw, Przemysla, or Sambor/Sambir to be exact.

This is a shell for Jewish Families of Turek.
Located in Wielkopolska Province at 52°02' N, 18°30' E, USBGN: -533,571.
Only a fraction of the Jewish records for this town survived the 20th century.
The Polish archives has the metrical records for 1837 only (these have also been indexed but are not live on JRI-Poland). A link to the images is in the list, below.
There is an extant Book o...

Plaszow Concentration Camp
Plaszow was originally a forced labour camp , and subsequently became a concentration camp. Its official designation was Zwangsarbeitslager Plaszow des SS- und Polizeiführers im Distrikt Krakau. The construction of the camp began in summer 1940. Its first prisoners were Poles. In 1941 the camp was extended and the first Jews were deported there. The site chosen ...

The Grand Dukes of Lithuania, c1200 - 1569
From King Mindaugas to Sigismund III.
The state of Lithuania formed in 1230s, when threatened by the Livonian Order in the north and the Teutonic Knights in the west, Baltic tribes united under Mindaugas leadership. He became the only crowned king of Lithuania. His state became known as Grand Duchy of Lithuania.
After Grand Duke Jogaila becam...

Meet the Gottheimers
Hamilton Jordan's original title for his memoir (published Oct 2015) was "Meet the Gottheimers" -- a startled observation finding out, after her funeral, that his maternal grandmother had been Jewish.
This Geni project collects Gottheimers, not just his. Some are indeed surprising. Contributions welcome.
Gottheimer Family Profiles
Family heads
(earliest kn...

Genealogy about Schulz Family from Germany in Meriden, USA
Any Informations about history of Schulz family, and In this project a Yours participitation are welcome, if you are interesting for participate or would like to become part of this project - just Join this project (select ACTIONS (top right) and click Join Project )
About family surname Schulz from wikipedia : En | De
Schulz is a...

... and has filled him with a divine spirit of wisdom, insight and knowledge in all craftsmanship. -- (Exodus 35:30-31)
The Broniatowski family from Czestochowa, Poland, included innkeepers, weavers, and soap makers as well as prominent figures in medical research, science and the arts.
During the Second World War, a family book, containing the history and origins of the Broniatow...

Dedicated to the memory of 400 years of a Jewish community that was brutally annihilated by the Nazis, in WWII.
A sub-Project of Jewish Communities of Mozavia District, Poland
This project seeks to collect all of the Jewish families from the town of Mława, Poland.
Photo: Mlawa ghetto in World War II. Jewish men in forced labor.
...

The place name "Dąbrowa", derived from the Polish word dąb (oak), denotes an "oak grove", as the territory of the original village is believed to be covered by oak forests back in the early days of its existence. Since in the 19th century the settlement grew to be an important coal mining center, its name was supplemented by the adjective "Górnicza" ("mining") in 1919.
During World War II, on...

The Aleksander chasidic movement flourished in Poland from 1880 until it was decimated by Nazi Germany during World War II. Now nearly extinct, the Aleksander Hasidim (also written as Alexander) were the second largest Hasidic group in pre-Holocaust Poland, centered in the small village of Alexander (or in Polish, Aleksandrów Łódzki) near Łódź. Today Aleksander chasidim live in communities in I...

Kielce was occupied on 4 September 1939 by the German army. Approximately 24,000 Jews lived in the town, a third of all inhabitants.
Like in all other occupied towns anti-Jewish actions took place immediately: Lootings, expropriations, forced labour and killings were the order of the day. Soon a Judenrat was established. Its first chairman was Moses Pelc who refused to collaborate with th...

The town of Bilgoraj is the principal town of its county in Lublin province. As of 2009 its population was 27.341. It is located on Bilgoraj Plateau, on the Lada River (right tributary of the Tanew River), in the vicinity of Roztoczanski National Park. On August 2, 1919 the province of Lublin consisting of 19 districts was established, including Bilgoraj district with the principal town being B...

My Notable Ancestors
My ancestors immigrated to the Azores around mid to late 1400's, they came from Flanders and Portugal and I've been able to trace some of their roots deep into Central Europe royalty.
This project is merely a fun spot for me to gather information from my family tree and organize it according to my genetic breakdown. If you are a 'cousin' and have had your DNA done, it w...

This Ghetto contained Jews from Dereczyn, Halinka and Kolonia--Sinaiska.
The Ghetto was liquidated by the SS Death Squads - Einsatzgruppen on July 24, 1942 or 10 day of Av 5702.
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El Moley Rachamim Holocaust Prayer

Following the Nazi–Soviet Invasion of Poland, a murderous Action T4 euthanasia program was carried out by the Nazi Germans in a local psychiatric hospital. In December 1939, German authorities established a Jewish ghetto in Otwock, in order to confine its Jewish population for the purpose of persecution and exploitation. The Ghetto was liquidated between August and September 19, 1942, when 75% ...

The Przemysl Ghetto is situated on the San River, in the former Lwow district of eastern Galicia. Today it is part of Podkarpackie voivodship. Before WW2 about 24,000 Jews lived in the town.
The Germans entered the town for the first time on 15 September 1939. Repressions and humiliations, aimed at the Jewish population, started almost immediately. Around 20,000 Jews still lived in Przemysl a...

Bochnia Ghetto, Krakow
In 1941, Bochnia Ghetto, Krakow , a closed ghetto, surrounded by a wooden fence, was established in Bochnia. At the beginning of April 1941, all “Aryan” inhabitants of the future ghetto area were resettled, and in July 1941 Jews were prohibited from leaving the ghetto without a special permit. From October 1941, by order of Hans Frank, to do so was punishable by dea...

This project seeks to collect all of the Jewish families from Grodzisk Mazowiecki, Poland.
Grodzisk Mazowiecki is a town located 30 km. southwest of Warsaw.
The town had a Jewish community and it had been the center of the Hasidic Grodzhisk dynasty, (Grodzisk Mazowiecki being pronounced as "Grodzhisk" in Yiddish.) Grodzisk was the birthplace of Kalonymus Kalman Shapira (1889-1943), also kno...

Roll Out the Barrel. We'll Have a Barrel of Fun!
Our purposes are to explore our common Milwaukee heritage, link together our family trees, maybe learn a little of Milwaukee history, and above all, have fun doing it.
Please visit our Milwaukee Polonia Project Blog for more information, including a list of family names known to be connected, and a FAQ section .
Overview:
For over 150 yea...

The purpose of this project is to identify and connect all of the Jewish families of the small town of Chorostkow.
Chorostkow, now called Khorostkiv is located between Husiatyn and Kopyczynce, on the banks of the River Taina in the Ternopil Oblast of the Ukraine in what was once Galician Podolia. The village was granted the rights of a small town by local magnate named Siamianski who invited ...

The President of the Republic of Poland (Polish: Prezydent Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej, shorter form: Prezydent RP) is the Polish head of state. His or her rights and obligations are determined in the Constitution of Poland.
The President of the Republic of Poland is the head of state, the supreme representative of Poland in the international arena. He has executive authority. He has a right to...

The Szebnie concentration camp (German: Lager Szebnie) was established during World War II by Germany, within the semi-colonial territory of General Government in the south-eastern part of occupied Poland. It was located near the town of Szebnie approximately 10 kilometres (6 mi) east of Jasło and 42 km (26 mi) south-west of Rzeszów. The facility was constructed in 1940 originally as horse stab...

The Order of Merit of the Republic of Poland (Polish: Order Zasługi Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej) is a Polish order awarded to those who have rendered great service to the Polish nation. It is granted to foreigners or Poles resident abroad and as such is a traditional 'diplomatic order'. It was created in 1974. Order Zasługi Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej – cywilne odznaczenie państwowe Rzeczypospolite...

Radom Ghetto was a World War II ghetto set up in March 1941 by Nazi Germany in the city of Radom in occupied Poland, for the purpose of persecution and exploitation of the local Polish Jews. Liquidation of the ghetto began in August 1942 and ended in July 1944, with approximately 30,000–32,000 victims sent to their deaths in cattle trucks at the Treblinka extermination camp.
האנציקלופדיה של...

Hi and welcome!
This page is for those who are descended from the Lipinski family from Pomerania or who are connected to it in some way. If you have information you are more than welcome to add it and feel free to ask questions.
Witam serdecznie!
Ta strona jest dla tych, którzy są potomkami rodziny Lipińskiego z Pomorza lub które są z nim związane w jakiś sposób. Jeśli masz informacje, kt...

THE “COMPLEX RIESE”
Extensive construction work on a number of underground shelters and tunnels took place in the Owl Mountains (a part of the Giant Mountains) between 1943 and 1945. The exact purpose of these facilities remains unclear even today. German sources suggest that they were supposed to be turned into a huge underground shelter covering more than 35 square kilometres, with one of A...